Global Scrolls

World literature gets witty: from AfriLit to AusLit, IndyLit to A-Merry-Lit, these scrolls explore diverse voices with satire, insight, and storytelling.

From Harlem jazz to Himalayan verse, Global Scrolls explore literary voices across cultures—American, Indian, African, Canadian, and Australian. Literature doesn’t need passports—only perspective.

IndyLit-10: Beyond Borders, Within Words

From Ismat to InstaLit, from epics to edge cases—Indian English literature closes one circle, and dares another to begin By ABS, The Literary Scholar, who believes the scroll never ends—only changes its ink, its tongue, and sometimes, its reader. Section 1: Echoes of the Past Before hashtags and hybrid forms, there were writers who had […]

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IndyLit-9 Hybrids, Heretics & Heartbreakers

Experimental, regional, poetic, political, and genre-bending voices who carved new shapes into Indian English fiction By ABS, The Literary Scholar, who believes the best stories are smuggled past genre police wearing metaphor like armour. Some writers write books. Others write possibilities. This scroll is not about tradition. It’s about disruption—not always loud, but always deliberate.

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IndyLit-7. Rebels, Realists, and Rule-Benders

Khushwant Singh, Nissim Ezekiel, Shashi Deshpande, Shashi Tharoor, and other bold voices who shaped Indian English literature from within By ABS, The Literary Scholar, who believes literary rebellion requires ink, irony, and absolutely no permission slips. By the time the world had made peace with the fact that Indians could write Booker-winning epics and diaspora

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IndyLit-6 The New Lit Order – Stories from the Now

Avni Doshi, Megha Majumdar, Akhil Sharma, Tishani Doshi & the writers who made Indian fiction sharper, darker, and globally relevant again By ABS, The Literary Scholar, who believes that emotional damage, when processed properly, becomes literary acclaim. Literature evolves like fashion. One day you’re wrapped in epic metaphors and Gitanjali gloom, the next you’re writing

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IndyLit-5. Across Oceans, Inside Minds – The Diasporic Dispatch

Jhumpa Lahiri, Rohinton Mistry, Bharati Mukherjee, Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni & diaspora writers who carried India in their suitcases By ABS, The Literary Scholar, who believes exile writes the best literature—and nostalgia is just homesickness in a prettier font. They left India, but India never really left them. It clung to their characters like turmeric in

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Indy-1. The Curry, the Quill, and the Colonial Hangover: How Three Indian Gentlemen Made English Their Own

Raja Rao, R.K. Narayan, and Mulk Raj Anand: The Holy Trinity of Indian English Prose (With a Side of Spices) By ABS, The Literary Scholar, who believes the first stroke of a literary nation was made by a fountain pen dipped in cultural conflict. If Indian English Literature were a three-course meal, this trio served

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AmL-9 Robert Frost: The Man Who Took the Road Less Traveled (and Then Made You Regret Choosing Anything)

Or, The Poet Who Made Nature Look Gorgeous and Emotionally Threatening at the Same Time By ABS, the Literary Scholar, who believes Robert Frost didn’t just win four Pulitzer Prizes—he quietly collected them like frostbitten warnings, proving that a poet could turn snowy woods and stone walls into lifelong existential crises. Robert Frost is the

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AmL-10 Sylvia Plath: The Poet Who Wrote in Lightning and Lived in a Bell Jar

Or, The Woman Who Handed Her Pain a Pen and Said, “Make It Beautiful” By ABS, the Literary Scholar, who believes Sylvia Plath didn’t just write confessions—she carved them in fire, turned her psyche into poetry, and taught the world that even a bell jar can echo. Sylvia Plath didn’t write poems. She detonated them.

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AmL-8 Walt Whitman: The Bearded Bard Who Yawped Across America

Or, The Man Who Looked at a Blade of Grass and Saw the Whole Cosmos By ABS, the Literary Scholar, who believes Walt Whitman didn’t just write poetry—he unleashed it barefoot, bearded, and bursting with the soul of the universe crammed into a single blade of grass. If Emily Dickinson wrote poems like secret confessions

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AmLit- 7 Emily Dickinson: The Queen of Quiet Chaos (Who Wrote Thunder in Dashes)

Or, The Woman Who Stayed Upstairs and Still Managed to Haunt All of Literature By ABS, the Literary Scholar, who believes Emily Dickinson turned isolation into revolution, made dashes a weapon, and whispered poems that still echo louder than most people’s careers. Emily Dickinson didn’t storm the literary stage. She tiptoed in, locked the door

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